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Query: UMLS:C0014118 (endocarditis)
15,629 document(s) hit in 31,850,051 MEDLINE articles (0.00 seconds)

Among 110 patients with dermatomyositis cardiovascular pathology was found in 77, and only in 37 of them it was attributable to the underlying pathology. In all of these patients myocardial lesions were found, that manifested themselves most frequently by non-specific ECG changes. Cardiac insufficiency and arrhythmias were revealed less frequently, mainly during exacerbations of the pathological process. Only in one patient endocarditis was diagnosed, and in two others elements of chronic cor pulmonale due to pneumonitis. In 18 patients signs of moderate myocardial dystrophy developed after a long-term therapy with corticosteroid hormones. A study of the central haemodynamics in 20 patients with dermatomyositis revealed a tendency towards a hyperkinetic state of the circulation in those patients who had the most sereve muscle syndrome. Angioscopy of the bulbar conjunctiva revealed the changes that persisted even during the remission period, achieved by means of active steroid therapy.
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PMID:[Cardiovascular pathology in dermatomyositis]. 115 33

Our experience with group C streptococcal infection over the past 15 years demonstrates an important and emerging role for this hemolytic organism as an opportunistic and nosocomial pathogen. Significant risk factors in this predominantly male population included chronic cardiopulmonary disease, diabetes, malignancy, and alcoholism. Bacteremia occurred in 74% of cases seen in our series. Nosocomial acquisition of infection was observed in 26%, and infection was frequently polymicrobial in nature with gram-negative enteric bacilli isolated most commonly along with group C streptococci. We observed a broad spectrum of infections including puerperal sepsis, pleuropulmonary infections, skin and soft-tissue infection, central nervous system infection, endocarditis, urinary tract infection, and pharyngeal infections. Several cases of bacteremia of unknown source were observed in neutropenic patients with underlying leukemia. New syndromes of infection due to group C streptococci observed in our series included intra-abdominal abscess, epidural abscess, and dialysis-associated infection. Response to therapy and outcome was related to the underlying disease. While the literature suggests that patients with group C endocarditis respond better to synergistic penicillin-aminoglycoside regimens, patient numbers are too small to draw definite conclusions. The clinical significance of antibiotic tolerant group C streptococci remains uncertain. In patients with serious group C infections including endocarditis, meningitis, septic arthritis, or bacteremia in neutropenic hosts, we advocate the initial use of cell-wall-acting agents in combination with an aminoglycoside.
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PMID:Infections due to Lancefield group C streptococci. 266 62

Of multiple etiologies for pure tricuspid regurgitation, the causes may be divided into those associated with anatomically abnormal and anatomically normal tricuspid valves. Conditions associated with anatomically abnormal valves include rheumatic, floppy, Ebstein's anomaly, carcinoid, infective endocarditis, papillary muscle dysfunction, and other rarer causes such as radiation, hypereosinophilic syndrome, and endomyocardial fibrosis. Conditions associated with anatomically normal tricuspid valves include multiple causes of cor pulmonale (chronic obstructive pulmonary disease, primary pulmonary hypertension, and pulmonary hypertension due to mitral stenosis). Of 45 necropsy patients with clinically documented pure tricuspid regurgitation, conditions producing pulmonary hypertension (cor pulmonale, mitral stenosis) were the most frequent etiology (47 percent), followed by floppy (16 percent), rheumatic (11 percent), idiopathic dilated cardiomyopathy (9 percent), Ebstein's anomaly (7 percent), and miscellaneous conditions (10 percent). Of multiple causes of pure mitral regurgitation, tricuspid valve anular circumference and leaflet area are useful measurements in establishing etiology: dilated anuli (greater than 12 cm) are associated with Ebstein's anomaly, floppy valves, and multiple causes of pulmonary hypertension. Increased leaflet areas are associated with floppy valves and Ebstein's anomaly. Anular insertion site separates floppy tricuspid valves from Ebstein's anomaly. Of 21 purely regurgitant operatively-excised tricuspid valves, the etiologies were: rheumatic (43 percent), "functional" due to pulmonary hypertension from mitral stenosis (38 percent), Ebstein's anomaly (9 percent), infective endocarditis (5 percent), and floppy (5 percent). In contrast to etiology of pure mitral regurgitation, rheumatic disease is the leading cause for operative excision of purely regurgitant tricuspid valves. Comparison of systolic pulmonary arterial pressures and tricuspid valve morphology disclosed that pulmonary arterial pressures greater than or equal to 55 mm Hg and tricuspid valve anuli greater than 12 cm were associated with anatomically normal tricuspid valves and that pulmonary arterial pressures less than or equal to 40 mm Hg and tricuspid anuli less than 12 cm were associated with anatomically abnormal tricuspid valves.
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PMID:Etiology of pure tricuspid regurgitation. 353 6

Despite recent renewed interest in the detection of tricuspid valve regurgitation by echocardiographic and Doppler techniques, little morphologic information is available on dysfunctioning tricuspid valves. This report describes 45 necropsy patients with clinical and morphologic evidence of pure (no element of stenosis) tricuspid regurgitation and provides morphometric observations (anular circumference, leaflet area) of the tricuspid valve useful in determining the etiology of pure tricuspid regurgitation. Of 45 patients, 24 (53%) had pure tricuspid regurgitation resulting from an anatomically abnormal valve (prolapse in 7, papillary muscle dysfunction in 6, rheumatic disease in 5, Ebstein's anomaly in 3, infective endocarditis in 2, carcinoid tumor in 1), and 21 (47%) had an anatomically normal valve with systolic pulmonary artery hypertension (cor pulmonale in 12, mitral stenosis in 9). Anular circumference was dilated (greater than 12 cm) in patients with various causes of pulmonary hypertension, floppy valve and Ebstein's tricuspid anomaly. Leaflet area was increased in floppy valve and Ebstein's anomaly. Of the 45 patients, 24 had pulmonary systolic artery pressure measurements available for correlation with tricuspid valve morphology. Pulmonary artery pressures accurately predicted morphologically normal from abnormal valves in 16 patients (89%). Morphologic overlap occurred in six patients with pulmonary pressures of 41 to 54 mm Hg. Of these six, the additional knowledge of normal or dilated anular circumference correctly separated valves with normal and abnormal leaflets.
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PMID:Etiology of pure tricuspid regurgitation based on anular circumference and leaflet area: analysis of 45 necropsy patients with clinical and morphologic evidence of pure tricuspid regurgitation. 395 62

In 1897, the anatomist Chiari described a structure in the right atrium connected to the Eustachian valve identified as the embryological vestige of the right valve of the sinus venosus. This structure was then forgotten. Recently, Werner described the echocardiographic appearances. During 1981, 1 600 consecutive patients underwent 2D echocardiography and the right atrium (RA) was visualised in several incidences. Abnormal RA echos fulfilling the echocardiographic criteria of the Chiari network were detected in 16 cases. The 2D echo appearances were as follows: a fine, mobile echo crossing the RA at right angles to its long antero posterior axis; arising from the anterior border of the orifice of the inferior vena cava, variably attached to the RA walls (lateral, superior, interatrial septum). The recordings were made from the transverse parasternal and apical or subcostal 4 chamber views. An M mode recording of this structure usually guided by the sector scan was made in 13 patients. This showed a fine curvilinear echo animated by antero-posterior vibrations during the cardiac cycle situated behind the anterior tricuspid leaflet. The pathological associations of the 16 patients in whom the Chiari network was demonstrated were as follows: 5 congenital cardiopathies including 3 ASDs, 1 isolated abnormal pulmonary venous drainage, 1 complex case comprising 1 ASD and 5 acquired lesions: aortic endocarditis; chronic cor pulmonale, idiopathic atrial fibrillation, pericarditis and coronary artery disease. Six patients did not appear to have cardiac disease. This structure was confirmed at surgery in 2 cases: the operative findings were a fine network of filaments stretching from the orifice of the inferior vena cava (Eustachian valve) to the RA walls.(ABSTRACT TRUNCATED AT 250 WORDS)
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PMID:[Echographic rediscovery of an anatomical structure: the Chiari network. Apropos of 16 cases]. 641 96

Three hundred eighty-seven pregnancies (295 patients) complicated by maternal heart disease, managed at the National Maternity Hospital, Dublin, Ireland, during the years 1969 to 1978, were reviewed. The incidence was 0.5%. Three hundred twenty-three (83.5%) were of rheumatic origin, 52 (13.4%) were congenital, and the remaining 12 (3.1%) were a miscellaneous group and included cases of cor pulmonale and coronary artery disease. There were two maternal deaths--one from congenital heart disease and one from postpartum suicide, unrelated to mild rheumatic heart disease. The perinatal mortality rate was 3.3%. Five pregnancies (three patients) were complicated by surgically uncorrected cyanotic congenital heart disease. One of the maternal deaths and three of the perinatal deaths occurred in this group. There were 38 episodes of cardiac failure (38 patients) in cases of rheumatic heart disease. The New York Heart Association grading was grade 1 in 15 (39%) of these before the onset of failure. Prophylactic antibiotics were not used and infective endocarditis did not occur. Therapeutic abortion was not practiced and a conservative approach was adopted in obstetric intervention and in all drug therapy.
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PMID:Pregnancy complicated by maternal heart disease at the National Maternity Hospital, Dublin, Ireland, 1969 to 1978. 745 8

Analysis of the data from 7188 cases seen in the 1980s two general hospitals in Shanghai and comparison of the data with those in the 1950s, 1960s and 1970s revealed that the percentage of heart diseases among the inpatients in medical wards increased in each decades, from 9.89%, 15.69% 20.91% to 23.54% respectively. The constituent ratios of different etiologic types of heart diseases changed. Coronary heart disease constituted the largest proportion, next in number was rheumatic heart disease and congenital heart disease was in the third place. The incidence of congenital heart diseases, myocarditis, cardiac dysrhythmias without organic heart diseases, cardiomyopathy and endocarditis increased and that of rheumatic heart disease, pulmonary heart disease and hypertensive heart disease apparently decreased, syphilitic heart disease was rarely encountered.
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PMID:[The trend of changes in etiologic types of heart diseases in Shanghai from 1948 to 1989]. 959 15

The commonest forms of heart disease in sub-Saharan Africa are chronic rheumatic heart disease, dilated cardiomyopathy, pulmonary heart disease, infectious forms of heart disease including chronic, constrictive and infective endocarditis, genetic forms of heart disease and arrhythmias. Malnutrition, with cardiac manifestations such as beriberi, and alcoholism also play a part. Ischaemic heart disease in sub-Saharan Africa at present affects mainly the small, Westernised white population. Heart disease is a less important cause of morbidity and mortality than many other infectious diseases but is likely to escalate in the next generation(s). The changing demographic picture dictates the way in which funds for research, prevention and treatment must be channelled to best advantage. A concerted effort must be made by cardiologists of African countries to arrest the advance of heart disease, and a declaration outlining these strategies has been endorsed by the Pan-African Society of Cardiology (PASCAR).
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PMID:Strategies for heart disease in sub-Saharan Africa. 1962 70